A Woman's War by Warwick Deeping (top romance novels txt) 📕
"I wonder whether Murchison is as privileged as I am?" he said, passing his cup over the red tea cosy.
"I suppose the woman gushes for him, just as I work my wits for you."
"The Amazons of Roxton."
"We live in a civilized age, Parker, but the battle is no less bitter for us. I use my head. Half the words I speak are winged for a final end."
"You are clever enough, Betty," he confessed.
"We both have brains" and she gave an ironical laugh "I shall not be content till the world, our world, fully recognizes that fact. Old Hicks is past his work. Murchison is the only rival you need consider. Therefore, Parker, our battle is with the gentleman of Lombard Street."
"And with the wife?"
"That is my affair."
Such life feuds as are chronicled in the hatred of a Fredegonde for a Brunehaut may be studied in miniature in many a modern setting.
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of rain purred on the tiled roofs of the old town and
set the broad eaves and high-peaked gables dripping.
A summer sweetness breathed in the gardens where the
fallen petals of rhododendrons lay like flame upon the
green grass. The roses were weighed down with dew,
and each leaf diamonded with a glimmering tear. In
Lombard Street the tall cypresses stood like solemn monks
cowled and coped against the rain.
The downpour had lessened a little, and Jack Murchison, flattening his nose against the nursery window,
saw a country cart driven by a man in a white mackintosh
swing into Lombard Street from the silver, rain-drenched
sheen of St. Antonia’s trees. The man’s big white body
streamed with wet, his face shining out like a drenched
peony under the brim of his hat, that dripped like the
flooded gutter of a house. Tremulous raindrops fell
rhythmically from the big man’s nose, and the apron that
covered his legs was full of puddles.
The country cart drew up outside the doctor’s house,
and Master Jack saw the big man in the white mackintosh
climb out laboriously, the cart tilting under his weight.
He threw the leather apron over the horse’s loins, and
swung the water out of his hat, disclosing to the
boy above a round bald patch about the size of a
saucer.
The bell rang, a good, rattling, honest peal that told
of a straightforward and unaffected fist. Jack heard
Mary’s rather nasal treble answering the big man’s vigorous bass. The white mackintosh was doffed and hung
considerately on the handle of the bell. There was much
wiping of boots, while the man Gage appeared at the
side gate in the garden wall, and came forward to hold
the farmer’s horse.
“Sorry to bother you, doctor, on such a beast of an
evening.”
“Come in, Mr. Carrington.”
“You remember me, sir?”
“I don’t forget many faces. Come into my study.”
The doffing of the white mackintosh had uncovered a
robust and rather corpulent, thick-set figure in rough
tweed jacket and breeches and box-cloth leggings. The
farmer had one of those typically solid English faces,
fresh-colored though deeply wrinkled, and chastening its
good humor with an alert, world-wise watchfulness in the
rather deep-set eyes. Mr. Carrington was considered
rather a masterful man by his friends, a man who could
laugh while his wits were at work bettering a bargain.
He was one of the most prominent farmers in the neighborhood, and one of the few who confessed to making
money despite the times.
“My trap’s waiting outside, doctor. I want you to come
back with me right away to Goldspur Farm.”
Mr. Carrington was sitting on the extreme edge of a
chair, and wiping the rain from his face with a silk handkerchief.
“Anything much the matter?”
“Well, doctor, you know I have taken to growing a
lot of ground-fruit, and I’ve had about fifty pickers down
from town this year.”
Murchison nodded.
“They’re camped out in two tin shanties and a couple
of tents down at Goldspur Farm. Eastenders, all of
them; and you never quite know, doctor, what an Eastender carries. Well, to be frank, I’m worried about
some of ‘em.”
Mr. Carrington sat squarely in his chair, and tapped
the floor with the soles of his boots. He looked thoughtful, and the corners of-his big, good-tempered mouth had
a melancholy droop.
“There’s one woman in particular, doctor, and her
youngster, who seem bad. Sick and sweating; won’t
take food; they just lie there in the straw like logs. My
foreman didn’t tell me anything about it till this afternoon, but when I’d seen the woman I had the horse put
in, and came straight here.”
Murchison glanced at his watch, and then crossed the
room and rang the bell.
“Can you have me driven back?” he asked.
“Certainly, doctor.”
“Good. Ah, Mary, will you ask your mistress to
have dinner postponed till eight. And tell Gage to take
these letters to the post. Now, Mr. Carrington, my
mackintosh and I are at your service.”
“You’ll need it, doctor, and an old hat.”
A slender vein of gold gashed the dull west as they
left the outskirts of the town behind. As the rent in the
sky broadened, long rays of light came down the valley,
making the woods and meadows a glory of shimmering
green, and firing the rain pools so that they shone like
brass. The farmer took the private road that ran through
Ulverstone Park, a rolling wilderness of beeches and
Scotch firs, whose green “rides” plunged into the glimmering rain-splashed umbrage of tall trees. Here were
tangled banks of purpling heather, and great stretches
of sweet woodland turf. Old yews brooded in the deeps of,
the domain, solemn and still, most ancient and wise of trees.
“Get up, Molly,” and Mr. Carrington shook a raindrop from his nose, and flicked the brown mare with the
whip. “Clearing a little. Sorry for the people who cut
their hay yesterday.”
“Somewhat damp. How is the fruit doing?”
“Oh, pretty fair, pretty fair, as far as our strawberries
are concerned. The finest year, doctor, is when you
have a first-class crop and your neighbors can only put
up rubbish. It’s no good every one being in tip-top form.
I’ve got rid of tons, and at no dirt price, either.”
Mr. Carrington’s British face beamed slyly above his
angelic white mackintosh. It was a face in which stolid
satisfaction and stolid woe were easily interchanged, for
the heavy lines thereof could be twisted into either expression.
Murchison was listening to the hoarse rattle of the
clearing shower beating upon a myriad leaves. The gold
band in the west was broadening into a canopy of splendor. Had Mr. Carrington been educated up to more
pushing and aggressive methods of making money, he
would have seen in that sky nothing but a magnificent
background for some silhouetted sky-sign shouting “Try
Our Jam.”
“And these pickers of yours, how long have they been
with you?”
The lines in the farmer’s face rearranged themselves
abruptly.
“Poor devils, they look on this as a sort of yearly picnic, doctor. There are about fifty of them, and they’ve
been at Goldspur about ten days.”
“Many children?”
“Children? Plenty. If they were Irish, they’d bring
the family pig out, doctor, just to give him some new sort
of dirt to wallow in. But then, what can you expect
what can you expect?”
They had left the park by the western lodge, and came
out upon a stretch of undulating fields closed in the near
distance by woods of oak and beech. A tall, gabled farmhouse of red brick rose outlined against the sky with a
great fir topping its chimney-stacks like the flat cloud
seen above a volcano in full eruption. Near it, fronting
the road, were a few nondescript cottages; farther still a
jumble of barns, outhouses, and stables. In the middle
of a fourteen-acre field Murchison could see two zincroofed sheds and a couple of old military tents standing
isolated in a waste of sodden, dreary soil.
Mr. Carrington pointed to them with his whip.
“There’s the colony. Will you come in first, doctor,
and have ” he reconsidered the words and cleared his
throat “and have a cup of tea?”
Murchison had noticed the break in the invitation, and
had reddened.
“No, thanks. We had better walk, I suppose?”
“Sit light, doctor; we have a sort of road, though it
ain’t exactly Roman.”
The farmer passed Murchison the reins, and climbed
down, the trap swaying like a small boat anchored in a
swell. He opened a gate leading into the field, his white
mackintosh flapping about his legs.
“Not worth while getting up again,” he said, laconically. “Drive her on, doctor, I’ll follow.”
Murchison heard the click of the gate, and the squelch
of Mr. Carrington’s boots in the mud, as the trap
bumped at a walking pace towards the zinc sheds in the
field. The larger of the two resembled a coach-house,
and could be closed at one end by two swinging doors.
The rain was still rattling on the roof as Murchison
drove up, and a thin swirl of smoke drifted out sluggishly
from the darkness of the interior. The two tents had a
soaked and slatternly appearance. Empty bottles, old
tins, scraps of dirty paper, and miscellaneous rubbish
littered the ground. On a line slung between two chestnut poles three dirty towels were hanging, either to wash
or to dry?
As the trap stopped at the end of the rough road, Murchison could see that the larger shed was like a big hutch
full of live things crowded together. A Utter of straw,
ankle deep, lay round the walls. A fire burned in the
middle of the earth floor. The faces that were lit up by
the light from the fire were coarse, quickeyed, and
hungry, the faces seen in London slums.
Half a dozen children scuttled out like a litter of young
pigs, and stood in the slush and rain, staring at the trap.
Murchison’s appearance on the scene seemed to arouse
no stir of interest among the adult dwellers in the shed.
They stared, that was all, one or two breaking the silence
with crude and characteristic brevity.
‘“Ello, ‘ere’s the b y doctor.”
“There’s ‘air!”
“Look at the hold boss, with a phiz like a round o’ raw
beef stuck hon top of a sack of flour.”
Mr. Carrington arrived with his boots muddy and the
lines of his face emphatic and authoritative.
“Some one hold the mare. Why don’t you keep the
kids in out of the wet? This way, doctor, the second
tent.”
Mr. Carrington opened the flap, and, letting Murchison
enter, contented himself with staring hard at two figures
lying on an old flock mattress with a coat rolled up for a
pillow. One was a woman, thin, still pretty, in a hollowcheeked, hectic way, with a ragged blouse open at the
throat, and a couple of sacks covering her. The other
was a child, a girl with flaxen hair tossed about a flushed
and feverish face. The child seemed asleep, with half
an orange, sucked to the pulp, clutched by her grimy
fingers.
Murchison remained for perhaps half an hour in that
rain-soaked tent, while Mr. Carrington stumped up and
down impatiently, kicking the mud from his boots and
eying the rubbish that marked the presence of these
London poor. The eastern sky was filling fast with the
oblivion of night when Murchison emerged. The woman
had been able to answer his questions in a dazed and
apathetic way.
Mr. Carrington met him with a squaring of his sturdy
shoulders and a bluff uplift of the chin.
“Well, doctor?”
“I’m glad you sent for me.”
“As bad as that, is it?”
“Typhoid, or I am much mistaken.”
The farmer thrust his hands into the side pockets of
his mackintosh, and flapped them to and fro.
“Well, I’m damned!” was all he said.
The cold sky rose dusted with a few stars in the west
when the farmer’s cart set Murchison down in Lombard
Street before his own door. Dinner had been waiting
more than an hour. Catherine’s face, bright, yet a little
troubled, met him in the shaded glow of the hall.
“You must be soaked to the skin, dear,” and she felt
his clothes.
“No, nothing much. I’m more hungry than wet.”
“A long case. Dinner is ready.”
They went into the diningroom together, Murchison ‘s
arm about her body.
“Some responsibility for me
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